Gies v. Gies ( 2024 )


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  •                           IN THE NEBRASKA COURT OF APPEALS
    MEMORANDUM OPINION AND JUDGMENT ON APPEAL
    (Memorandum Web Opinion)
    GIES V. GIES
    NOTICE: THIS OPINION IS NOT DESIGNATED FOR PERMANENT PUBLICATION
    AND MAY NOT BE CITED EXCEPT AS PROVIDED BY NEB. CT. R. APP. P. § 2-102(E).
    BRODY S. GIES, APPELLANT,
    V.
    CHELSEY D. GIES, APPELLEE.
    Filed June 18, 2024.   No. A-23-792.
    Appeal from the District Court for Scotts Bluff County: TRAVIS P. O’GORMAN, Judge.
    Affirmed.
    Andrew W. Snyder, of Holyoke, Snyder, Longoria, Reichert & Rice, P.C., L.L.O., for
    appellant.
    Sterling T. Huff, of Sterling T. Huff Attorney at Law, P.C., L.L.O., for appellee.
    MOORE, ARTERBURN, and WELCH, Judges.
    WELCH, Judge.
    I. INTRODUCTION
    Brody S. Gies appeals from the decree of the Scotts Bluff County District Court dissolving
    his marriage to Chelsey D. Gies. He contends that the district court abused its discretion in failing
    to award the parties joint physical custody and in not utilizing a joint custody child support
    calculation. For the reasons set forth herein, we affirm.
    II. STATEMENT OF FACTS
    1. BACKGROUND
    Brody and Chelsey met in 2011 and were married in August 2012. The parties had three
    children together: Riggley D. Gies, born in 2013; Ebbet S. Gies, born in 2014; and Crosley M.
    Gies, born in 2016.
    -1-
    During the parties’ marriage, both Chelsey and Brody drank alcohol with Chelsey
    abstaining while she was pregnant. In May 2016, Brody, while intoxicated, suffered a traumatic
    brain injury when he fell from a moving golf cart. After that injury, Brody abstained from alcohol
    for approximately 14 months but then resumed drinking. In 2019, the parties separated for a period
    of approximately 7 months during which time Chelsey and the children moved out of the marital
    home. During that period of time, Chelsey obtained a part-time job as a paralibrarian and she took
    care of the children. According to Chelsey, during those 7 months, the children were never alone
    in Brody’s care and he never had them overnight. Thereafter, the parties reconciled, Chelsey and
    the children moved back into the marital residence, and Chelsey quit her job to resume being a
    stay-at-home parent. The parties purchased a new home located on approximately 6 acres with the
    closest neighbor approximately 1 mile away.
    In April 2022, the parties separated permanently. Brody moved out of the marital home
    and initially stayed at a facility owned by the family business, but later purchased an RV that he
    parked on the marital property. In July, Brody filed a complaint for dissolution of the parties’
    marriage requesting joint legal and physical custody of the parties’ minor children. Chelsey
    counterclaimed requesting sole legal and physical custody of the parties’ minor children.
    In late August 2022, the court entered an order that awarded the parties joint temporary
    legal custody with Chelsey having final decisionmaking if the parties could not agree. The order
    further awarded Chelsey primary physical custody of the parties’ children subject to Brody’s
    specified parenting time. The court’s temporary order provided that “[n]either party may use
    alcohol or non-prescribed controlled substances during their parenting time or within 12 hours
    before the start of their parenting time.” The order also excluded Brody from the parties’ real
    estate. However, after Brody left the residence, Chelsey noticed that security cameras had been
    placed around the property pointing to the marital residence. Security cameras had not been
    previously present on the marital property. Shortly after finding the security cameras, Chelsey and
    the children moved out of the marital home.
    Prior to trial, the parties were able to agree on the disposition of their marital property and
    holiday parenting time. Accordingly, the evidence presented during the trial focused on the issues
    of custody and child support.
    2. TRIAL
    The trial was held over 3 days in August 2023. Witnesses at trial included Brody; Chelsey;
    Brody’s mother and father; Dallas Massey, a mental health and drug and alcohol therapist who
    conducted an alcohol evaluation on Brody in September 2022; and Dyllan Gies, Brody’s oldest
    daughter.
    The majority of the evidence adduced focused on (a) Brody and Chelsey’s alcohol use, (b)
    Chelsey’s alleged interference in Brody’s relationships with his family, including his parents and
    his daughter Dyllan Gies, and (c) the parties’ involvement in their children’s lives and their
    respective relationships with their children.
    (a) Evidence Regarding the Parties’ Alcohol Use
    The evidence established that both Chelsey and Brody drank alcohol during their marriage,
    with Chelsey testifying that she abstained while she was pregnant and breastfeeding. According to
    -2-
    Chelsey, Brody’s drinking was a consistent problem during their marriage, with Brody consistently
    drinking to the point of intoxication, and 2 to 3 times per week drinking until he passed out.
    Drinking was also an issue for Brody prior to the parties’ marriage as evidenced by Brody’s
    conviction of DUI at the age of 19 and being convicted for being a minor in possession.
    Brody’s alcohol consumption culminated in a significant event in May 2016, when after a
    day of drinking, Brody suffered a traumatic brain injury. According to Chelsey, Brody, who was
    drunk, jumped on the back of a golf cart and was “rocking [it] back and forth.” Brody fell from
    the moving golf cart and hit his head on the gravel road. Chelsey stated that Brody was unconscious
    and was in a pool of blood coming out of his ear. Brody was life-flighted to the hospital. Chelsey
    stated that after Brody regained consciousness in the hospital, he experienced “a lot of mood
    changes, paranoia, [and] hallucinations,” and at times, he could not remember things or would
    repeat the same questions. Brody was discharged from the hospital after 2 weeks. According to
    Chelsey, after Brody’s discharge, he did not like loud noises or bright lights, was “confused a lot
    of the time,” “had fits of paranoia,” and was convinced that people were in their basement or
    outside of their home.
    Brody returned to work 1 or 2 months after the accident and did not drink any alcohol for
    14 months. Brody stated that the only lasting effect from the accident was that he has no taste or
    smell. However, Chelsey testified that when Brody resumed drinking after his brain injury, he
    “seemed angry a lot of the time. I thought that [it] might just be kind of a lingering . . . symptom
    from the injury . . . mood fluctuations and things like that. I kind of always assumed it would get
    better.” However, in 2018, Brody’s behavior after drinking became “ragey.” Chelsey’s testimony
    provided greater detail regarding why she believed Brody’s alcohol use has been, and remains, a
    problem as it relates to their marriage and family. Additionally, Chelsey introduced into evidence
    two letters from Brody to her and the children documenting the nature and extent of Brody’s
    alcohol abuse. In Brody’s letter to Chelsey, he admitted to drinking excessively and that his
    drinking had negatively impacted his family. In Brody’s letter to his children, he expressed that he
    was “so very sorry for tearing our family apart,” and he admitted to making “some really bad, big
    choices in [his] life.” He told the children that he was “not happy with [his] choices in life that put
    us all here” and that he was “working on [him]self” and would “become the father figure that you
    all need and deserve.”
    Brody admitted that his drinking increased approximately 5 to 6 months prior to the parties’
    separation in April 2022 as a means of coping with the parties’ toxic relationship. Brody reported
    that at that time, he was drinking 4 to 5 beers approximately 4 to 5 times per week and that, on
    some nights, he would have 8 to 10 beers. Despite this, Brody testified that
    to sit here and make this trial about alcohol I think is absolutely crazy. . . . do I drink
    alcohol; yes, I do. At the end of our relationship, yes, I might’ve drank a little bit more.
    Most of the time it was after the kids were [in] bed.
    Brody explained that, around that time, he wrote a letter to Chelsey in which he described himself
    as a drunk, he was in “the worst spot of [his] life.” In this letter, Brody describes his drinking
    problems and his guilt over how those problems have affected his family. He stated that at that
    time his relationship with Chelsey was “toxic” and that
    -3-
    I had a lot of time to reflect on myself, my life, our relationship, [and] me and my kids’s
    [sic] relationship. And as I sat there and thought about things, yes at the end of our
    relationship I was to a point I didn’t want to go home. When I go there, we would have a
    few drinks, there wasn’t a lot of conversation at the end of our relationship, there wasn’t a
    lot of good in our relationship.
    I would still partake with the kids, whatever, after they would go to bed, we would
    tell them goodnight. Yes, then I would usually be outside, have a few more drinks than
    what I should be and I thought about those when I wrote this letter to her.
    Brody testified that his drinking has never affected his ability to work at the meat market
    or care for his children and that he never missed any of the children’s activities except for one
    wrestling event that he was unable to attend due to a work obligation.
    Brody’s mother testified that she became concerned about Brody’s drinking in
    approximately 2018. However, since Brody and Chelsey separated in April 2022, she has not been
    concerned about his drinking because “[h]e’s drinking like my other family members drink and he
    was not out of control.” She further questioned Chelsey’s claims that Brody was having drunken
    rages because when Brody is drunk “[h]e gets this silly grin on his face, he is more of a lover when
    he’s had too much to drink, and he never shuts up. So he talks a lot . . . he hugs when he’s had too
    much to drink.” She further testified that she had not observed anything about Brody’s drinking
    that caused her concern about his ability to effectively parent his children. Brody’s mother also
    expressed that she did not have any concerns about Brody’s drinking affecting his work
    performance.
    Similarly, Brody’s father testified that he has never seen Brody in a drunken rage and that
    “[i]t’s the total opposite of that.” According to Brody’s father, “when [Brody] drinks a little more
    than he should, that’s when he gets even more talkative and more lovey-dovey . . .” Brody’s father
    testified that Brody is a hard-working, prompt, and responsible co-owner of the family’s meat
    market and Brody’s drinking has not caused problems at work. Brody’s father also stated that he
    has not been concerned about Brody’s drinking since Brody and Chelsey separated in April 2022
    and nothing caused him concern about whether Brody could effectively care for his children.
    Massey, a mental health and drug and alcohol therapist, testified that she met with Brody
    for an alcohol evaluation in September 2022. Based upon Brody’s responses regarding his drinking
    during the previous year, collateral information, and diagnostic screening tools, Massey
    determined that Brody did not meet the criteria for substance use disorder. Massey had a follow-up
    visit with Brody in June 2023 during which he reported that he was drinking socially but not to
    intoxication. Massey opined that Brody’s alcohol use would not be a concern regarding his ability
    to parent. Massey also testified that Brody denied having hangovers, being sick, and experiencing
    memory lapses. Chelsey disputed this testimony, stating that Brody had hangovers, was sick, and
    had memory lapses during her last year in the marital home with Brody. Additionally, Chelsey
    testified that Brody drank in violation of the court’s temporary order and did so in the children’s
    presence.
    -4-
    (b) Chelsey’s Alleged Interference With
    Brody’s Relationships With Family Members
    Brody’s oldest daughter, 17-year-old Dyllan, testified that Chelsey interfered with her
    relationship with Brody to the extent that they were estranged for a period of time. But, since
    Brody and Chelsey’s separation, Dyllan and Brody’s relationship has improved. Similarly,
    Brody’s mother and father testified that Chelsey interfered with Brody’s relationship with his
    mother.
    (c) Parties’ Respective Relationships With and
    Involvement In the Minor Children’s Lives
    The evidence established that during the parties’ marriage, Brody worked at his family’s
    meat market of which he was a part-owner. Chelsey became a stay-at-home parent following
    Riggley’s birth in 2013. After the parties’ separation, Chelsey worked part-time as a paralibrarian
    and, about a month prior to the trial, she obtained a full-time remote position as a claims
    administrator for an insurance company. At the time of the trial, Riggley was 10 years old, Ebbet
    was 9 years old, and Crosley was 6 years old. The parties’ minor children are doing well and are
    excelling in school.
    Chelsey testified that, during the parties’ marriage, she performed all of the household
    duties including cooking, cleaning, laundry, shopping, and scheduling and attending the children’s
    activities including medical appointments and registering them for school. She stated that,
    although Brody spent time with the children, he and the children were not close and they did not
    share a bond. Chelsey testified that joint legal and physical custody with Brody was not workable
    because she had “absolutely zero confidence that he is a capable or healthy parent in any capacity,
    but as far as coparenting, it’s an impossibility.”
    Chelsey testified that it was in the children’s best interests for her to be awarded primary
    custody because the children are stable, secure, and safe, and disrupting that “would make no sense
    to me.” She stated that “[t]he only issues are the coparenting time that [Brody] already has.”
    Chelsey also expressed her opinion that Brody was not capable of taking care of the children’s
    physical and emotional needs. Chelsey testified that she is
    the only thing that has ever been consistent in [the children’s] lives. When they are with
    me at home, they are stable, they are secure, they are safe, . . . they are well taken care of.
    And not just physical needs, not just cooking a meal and getting them dressed . . . for
    school; their emotional well-being is handled . . . everything from being respectful kids and
    knowing good friends from bad friends . . . being a humble loser and a humble winner
    during sports. All the things that come with being a parent that is home.
    Brody disputed much of Chelsey’s testimony. He stated that he helped with cooking,
    cleaning, and taking care of the children. Brody testified that his relationship with his children is
    “awesome” and that he is “a very active father,” including coaching Riggley’s softball team,
    coaching Ebbet’s baseball and football teams, and attending Ebbet’s wrestling tournaments. He
    described Riggley as a little girl who “has no cares in the world” and likes music, art, cooking,
    playing cards, and playing with barbies. Brody testified that he and Ebbet bond over fantasy
    football, sports, and Ebbet’s participation in sports. Brody described Crosley as “very to himself
    -5-
    but . . . tougher than he knows. He’s good at everything because he watches his older siblings. . . .
    he just wants to go have fun and he wants to play golf . . . And that’s what we do out in the yard
    is [play] basketball, golf, [and] football.” Brody stated that he and Crosley are early risers so they
    spend time together watching cartoons. Crosley “loves life,” has a “good attitude,” and “loves
    being outdoors.”
    Brody’s father testified that Brody is “a very good dad” and “very” involved with his
    children. Brody engaged in a lot of outside activities with the children including shooting baskets
    and practicing baseball, softball, and football. Similarly, Brody’s mother described Brody as a
    “very good dad” and “a hands-on dad” and that, when Brody has time with the children, they play
    with Legos, play cards, and play outdoors.
    3. DISSOLUTION DECREE
    In September 2023, the court filed an order awarding the parties joint legal custody with
    Chelsey having final decisionmaking authority and awarding Chelsey sole physical custody of the
    minor children. Brody was ordered to pay $899 in monthly child support for the parties’ three
    minor children. Regarding the custody award, the court noted that Chelsey has always been the
    children’s primary caregiver and has been a stay-at-home mother for the majority of the parties’
    marriage. The court noted that
    Much of the evidence in this case centered around Brody’s drinking. Both parties
    present very different pictures of what Brody’s drinking actually looks like. The Court
    [finds] that Chelsey was more credible with regard to her testimony of Brody’s drinking.
    Although both parties drank during the duration of their marriage, Brody’s drinking was a
    significant problem. He admits as much in Exhibits 58 and 59.
    The court further found that “a joint custody arrangement is not a workable option with these
    parties. Brody refuses to get along and is subject to outbursts. The voicemail he left Chelsey is
    telling and indicative of how Brody reacts when things do not go his way.”
    III. ASSIGNMENTS OF ERROR
    Brody assigns as error that the district court erred in (1) failing to award the parties joint
    custody and (2) not utilizing a joint custody child support calculation.
    IV. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    In a marital dissolution action, an appellate court reviews the case de novo on the record to
    determine whether there has been an abuse of discretion by the trial judge. Radmanesh v.
    Radmanesh, 
    315 Neb. 393
    , 
    996 N.W.2d 592
     (2023). In a review de novo on the record, an appellate
    court is required to make independent factual determinations based upon the record, and the court
    reaches its own independent conclusions with respect to the matters at issue. 
    Id.
     When evidence is
    in conflict, the appellate court considers and may give weight to the fact that the trial court heard
    and observed the witnesses and accepted one version of the facts rather than another. 
    Id.
    -6-
    V. ANALYSIS
    1. PHYSICAL CUSTODY
    Brody first assigns as error that the district court abused its discretion in failing to award
    the parties joint physical custody of their minor children. He contends that the district court placed
    too much emphasis on his issues with alcohol. Brody admits that he had alcohol issues at the time
    of the parties’ separation but argued that he had remedied that issue in the 1½ years since the
    parties’ separation. He also argues that the evidence did not support the court’s finding that joint
    physical custody was not a workable option between the parties.
    In determining child custody issues, the overriding consideration is the best interests of the
    children. Donald v. Donald, 
    296 Neb. 123
    , 
    892 N.W.2d 100
     (2017). In evaluating the children’s
    best interests, courts are directed to consider what parenting arrangement will best provide for
    children’s safety, emotional and physical health, and stability, with an emphasis on continuous
    school attendance and progress. 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 43-2923
    (1) (Reissue 2016).
    The standard for determining custody is parental fitness and the child’s best interests. Gress
    v. Gress, 
    271 Neb. 122
    , 
    710 N.W.2d 318
     (2006). Nebraska’s Parenting Act states that it is in the
    best interests of the child to have a “safe, stable, and nurturing environment.” 
    Neb. Rev. Stat. § 43-2921
     (Reissue 2016). To determine the best interests of a child, a court must consider, at a
    minimum: (1) the relationship of the minor child to each parent prior to the commencement of the
    action or any subsequent hearing; (2) the desires and wishes of the minor child, if of an age of
    comprehension but regardless of chronological age, when such desires and wishes are based on
    sound reasoning; (3) the general health, welfare, and social behavior of the minor child; (4)
    credible evidence of abuse inflicted on any family or household member; and (5) credible evidence
    of child abuse or neglect or domestic intimate partner abuse. § 43-2923(6). Other pertinent factors
    a court may consider in determining the best interests of a child include the moral fitness of the
    child’s parents, including sexual conduct; respective environments offered by each parent; the age,
    sex, and health of the child and parents; the effect on the child as a result of continuing or disrupting
    an existing relationship; the attitude and stability of each parent’s character; and the parental
    capacity to provide physical care and satisfy education needs of the child. Robb v. Robb, 
    268 Neb. 694
    , 
    687 N.W.2d 195
     (2004).
    Here, a substantial amount of the testimony presented at trial focused on the parties’ alcohol
    use. Because the parties placed an emphasis on this issue, we reject Brody’s claim that the court
    erred in also placing emphasis on that issue. We also note that although testimony of Brody and
    Chelsey as well as other witnesses differed on the extent of Brody’s alcohol use and its effects on
    his actions, it is apparent from the record that Brody has suffered both ill effects and complications
    due to the use of alcohol in his life. And despite the court’s temporary order providing that
    “[n]either party may use alcohol or non-prescribed controlled substances during their parenting
    time or within 12 hours before the start of their parenting time,” Chelsey testified that Brody drank
    in violation of the court’s temporary order and did so in the children’s presence. This evidence
    stands in stark contrast to Brody’s testimony that he no longer struggles to control his use of
    alcohol and it supports the court’s finding that Brody’s alcohol use was, and remains, a problem.
    Despite Brody’s attempts to minimize the impact alcohol has on his ability to parent his children
    and to deal with Chelsey, the district court found Chelsey’s testimony on the subject more credible.
    -7-
    When evidence is in conflict, the appellate court considers and may give weight to the fact that the
    trial court heard and observed the witnesses and accepted one version of the facts rather than
    another. Radmanesh v. Radmanesh, 
    315 Neb. 393
    , 
    996 N.W.2d 592
     (2023).
    We likewise reject Brody’s claim that the court erred in determining that joint physical
    custody was not a workable option for the parties. The parties do not dispute that Chelsey has been
    the children’s primary caretaker. There is also no dispute that both Brody and Chelsey have good
    relationships with their children and are loving parents, but they have difficulty communicating
    with each other. Chelsey testified that their relationship with each other made a joint custody
    arrangement unworkable. As this court stated in Coffey v. Coffey, 
    11 Neb. App. 788
    , 
    661 N.W.2d 327
     (2003), when parents are unable or unwilling to execute parenting duties jointly, the result is
    that one parent or the other must be given primary responsibility for the child’s care. The district
    court found that the communication issues are due, in large measure, to Brody, as evidenced by
    the voicemail he left for Chelsey. Again, when considering findings of fact, when evidence is in
    conflict, the appellate court considers and may give weight to the fact that the trial court heard and
    observed the witnesses and accepted one version of the facts rather than another. Radmanesh v.
    Radmanesh, 
    supra.
    Although Brody clearly loves his children, based on these factors, coupled with Brody’s
    record of prior alcohol-related incidents and Brody’s own admissions governing the impact that
    alcohol had on his married and family life, we find that the record supports the court’s conclusion
    to place physical custody of the parties’ children with Chelsey.
    2. CHILD SUPPORT
    Brody’s second assignment of error argues:
    To the extent that this Court agrees that [Brody] should have been awarded joint
    custody, a joint custody child support calculation is appropriate. The District Court should
    be ordered to reevaluate the child support calculation and calculate child support utilizing
    a joint custody calculation as set forth in the child support guidelines.
    Brief for appellant at 24.
    Because we have determined that the district court did not abuse its discretion in failing to
    award the parties joint physical custody of the parties’ minor children, it follows that the court did
    not abuse its discretion in not ordering child support based upon a joint custody. See Lasu v. Lasu,
    
    28 Neb. App. 478
    , 502, 
    944 N.W.2d 773
    , 791 (2020) (having determined that district court did not
    abuse discretion in awarding appellee legal and physical custody, “we need not address [the
    appellant’s] argument that child support should have been calculated as if the parties were awarded
    joint custody”).
    VI. CONCLUSION
    Having determined that the district court did not abuse its discretion in granting Chelsey
    sole physical custody of the parties’ minor children subject to Brody’s reasonable parenting time
    and that, accordingly, we conclude the court likewise did not abuse its discretion in not ordering
    Brody’s child support obligation based upon joint custody, we affirm.
    AFFIRMED.
    -8-
    

Document Info

Docket Number: A-23-792

Filed Date: 6/18/2024

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 7/10/2024